
Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Neil Young Available Now
UPDATE 2026
Click on the link to see what we would typically have to say about a vintage After the Gold Rush. ATGR is a record, by the way, that we almost never have in stock.
As you might imagine, the right early pressings are tough to find in clean condition and gettng tougher by the day.
I suppose that’s the main reason audiophiles and music lovers buy these ridiculously bad sounding reissues — at least they’re new and quiet. Our advice is to buy the CD. It will have better sound and cost a lot less than a remastered pressing on Heavy Vinyl.
For our review of the Heavy Vinyl After the Gold Rush we noted:
Cleverly the engineers responsible for this remaster seem to have managed to reproduce the sound of a dead studio on a record that wasn’t recorded in one.
This pressing has no real space or ambience. Now the album sounds like it was recorded in a heavily baffled studio, but we know that’s not what happened, because the originals of After the Gold Rush, like most of Neil’s other albums from the era, are clear, open and spacious.
In other words, they are transparent. You can easily hear into the record all the way to the back of the studio.
You hear all the space surrounding the players.
Modern records, like the recent [well, 2009] After the Gold Rush are almost always opaque and airless. We can’t stand that sound. In fact it drives us crazy.
(more…)